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President Barack Obama & The NAACP On Same Sex Marriage What?

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 31, 2012

I have read several pieces of material that speaks to our President and the NAACP support of same sex marriage.

I find some of the material to be quite interesting especially since I was following the same sex marriage thingy before President Barack Obama came out in support. The NAACP in North Carolina was already addressing the issue as a civil rights issue. The NAACP addressed the issue from the national mission statement of the NAACP. The NAACP NC spoke out against the Amendment One before President Barack Obama took a stand after the election.

I read one piece of material that stated the NAACP may have been forced to take a stand with our President because they receive grant money. Again I repeat the NAACP NC took a stand before the President took his stand.

The NAACP National Board met after President Obama took his stand and the NAACP NC President Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II is a board member.

If you read the mission statement of the NAACP you will see that if they had not taken the stand that they did they would have been going against their mission statement.

I am not a Bible scholar nor a Constitution scholar but I do ask the following question:

Updated: Same Sex Marriage, Amendment One, The Constitution, The Bible, NC General Statue Chapter 51 Marriage

See related:

Pastor Moss’ Response to President Obama’s Comments on Marriage Equality by Trinity United Church of Christ 

Media Advisory: NC NAACP to Hold News Conference on National NAACP Endorsement of Marriage Equality 

NAACP Endorses Same-Sex Marriage – The Root 
Serendipity in Obama’s timing on gay marriage – The Miami Herald 
The Far Right’s Trick Amendment 
Vice President Biden Endorses Same-Sex Marriage – Congress.org 
Rev. William Barber Speaks Out Against Amendment One  – NAACP President/National Board of Directors
Media Advisory: NC NAACP Rolls Out Statewide Media Campaign to Expose the Truth About the Discriminatory Amendment One

Posted in NAACP NC, Same Sex Marriages, President Obama | Leave a Comment »

NC NAACP Statement on Uptick in KKK Activity in North Carolina

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 26, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 25, 2012

 

For More Information     Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                        Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

  

NC NAACP Statement on Uptick in KKK Activity in North Carolina

 

The NC NAACP stands with many citizens of our state, White, Black, Latino, Native American and of different creeds and religions, to denounce the call for White-Only Ku Klux Klan rallies here in North Carolina.

 

We join citizens in rejecting the KKK’s White Supremacist philosophy and history of domestic terrorism. We applaud our local leadership, NAACP Branch President Skip McCall and the growing diversity of citizens in Iredell County that have already stepped forward and rejected this philosophy.  Loving and right-thinking citizens of this state know that on Memorial weekend we should be remembering all of the veterans, of all races, who fought for freedom and defended democracy in this Nation rather than tainting our present moment with these sentiments of White Supremacy.

 

We believe in free speech, but we don’t agree with or support hate speech and we condemn terrorist activity and racial intimidation. Let them have their speech within the framework of the law, but in anticipation of a rally of the Ku Klux Klan in Harmony, North Carolina, the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP strongly urges all law enforcement agencies to prepare to prevent and protect all citizens who have historically been targeted by this organization.

 

While they look backwards we will work to build One North Carolina where all families have good jobs, living wages, are lifted out of poverty, are provided health care and access to a high quality education. We join with all those who wish to go Forward Together, Not One Step Back. And we call on local and statewide leaders to also reject racial hatred and join in God’s redemptive work of love and justice. And we pray that one day all of us, even members of the KKK, will join in the work of building the Beloved Community.

 

North Carolina is no stranger to KKK violence. In recent North Carolina history, the Klan attacked a group of Black and White protestors in the 1979 massacre Greensboro, in a predominantly Black housing project, resulting in the deaths of five people. All North Carolinians must remember this history, and should know that concern about a rally and cross burning by the KKK cannot be overstated.

 

Free speech is a fundamental American right established in our foundational documents more than 200 years ago.  Free speech in the public sphere is not restricted to speech that we agree with. However, it is NAACP’s right to not support, uphold or embrace the hatred, racism, un-American beliefs, and domestic terrorist acts of this age-old terrorist secret society.  It is the Klan’s right to march, but not to intimidate, deface private property or to terrorize fellow Americans through such crimes. And we must keep in mind that there is a difference between free speech and hate speech.

  

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.  

 

 

 NAACP Logo

 

 

See related:

NAACP NC

Posted in KKK activity, NAACP NC | Leave a Comment »

NAACP CALLS FOR FULL INVESTIGATION OF RACIALLY-MOTIVATED AND HATE-FILLED VANDALISM OF ELDERLY BLACK VETERAN BUSINESSMAN’S PROPERTY IN CASWELL COUNTY NC

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 26, 2012

 
NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 25, 2012

 

For More Information     Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                        Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

NAACP CALLS FOR FULL INVESTIGATION OF RACIALLY-MOTIVATED AND HATE-FILLED VANDALISM OF ELDERLY BLACK VETERAN BUSINESSMAN’S PROPERTY IN CASWELL COUNTY NC

 

DURHAM – The North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP is calling for a full investigation by all local, state, and federal jurisdictional law enforcement, and local and state elected officials, of the racially-motivated and hate-filled vandalism of an elderly black veteran’s business that occurred this week in Caswell County. 

 

Ernest Pinnix, 66, a Purple Heart Vietnam veteran, has been a vocal opponent to the replacement of a Confederate soldier statue in downtown Reidsville, which was knocked down in a car accident in 2011. The Reidsville City Council agreed with Mr. Pinnix and voted to move the statue to a cemetery for Confederate soldiers. Mr. Pinnix runs an auto repair shop in which at one time, five generations worked together.  He has informed local NAACP leadership and the State Conference that his tow truck was vandalized this week with six commercial tires slashed, each door and the rollback keyed, and the front wall spray-painted with the words, "The statue is coming back." Additionally, big letters were painted across the two-pane window in the front of his business, "F… Obama."

 

Rev. Barber and a NC NAACP legal team will visit Mr. Pinnix’s shop on Tuesday, May 29. There will be a press conference following his visit where they will discuss the matter and further actions by the NC NAACP. The exact time will be released on Monday.

 

"We are going to see first hand and investigate a situation that is obviously quite disturbing just from the verbal and written reports," said Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President of the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP. "Vicious and vulgar references of the President of the United States, trespassing on private property, hateful and racially charged messages in addition to property damage have terrorized this family. This should not only disturb us but represent the kind of domestic terrorism and intimidation that law enforcement and our communities cannot tolerate. Nor should they go unpunished."

 

Responding to this controversy, Rev. Clarence Johnson, President of the Reidsville Branch of the NAACP, and a State District Director said, "The Reidsville Branch of the NAACP is standing behind the decision made by the Reidsville City Council to not have the statue replaced in the middle of downtown.  It should be placed in the local cemetery.  It’s time all of our communities should say: Forward Ever, Backwards Never."

 

Mr. Pinnix has been active in his community supporting boy scouts, and 4-H groups in the Brown’s Chapel Cherry Grove Community of Caswell County.  During last year’s Christmas parade, he displayed a banner against putting the statue back in downtown Reidsville.  He represents progressive politics and remains a vocal opponent, which is his right as a citizen.  Married for 46 years, Mr. Pinnix is the father of two adult children.

 

The vandalism occurred late Tuesday night on Mr. Pinnix’s property where his business is located.  "The citizens of Caswell County are shocked and appalled that this incident has occurred," said Mr. Nate Hall, President of the Caswell County Branch of the NAACP. "And of course, we are concerned about the welfare of Mr. Ernest Pinnix and his family.  The Caswell County Branch of the NAACP fully supports Mr. Pinnix and his family and trusts that justice will be served." 

 Pictures Courtesy of Pinnix Family

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tire Slashed 

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.  

 

 

 NAACP Logo

 

 
 
 
 
 

See related:

NAACP NC

Posted in Black Veteran Businessman, CASWELL COUNTY NC, NAACP NC, RACIALLY-MOTIVATED AND HATE-FILLED VANDALISM | 1 Comment »

Media Advisory: NC NAACP to Hold News Conference on National NAACP Endorsement of Marriage Equality

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 20, 2012

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NC NAACP Letterhead

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 20, 2012

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                               Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

NC NAACP News Conference on Endorsement of Marriage Equality 

 

DURHAM – The North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP will hold a news conference on Monday morning to discuss the decision to endorse marriage equality by the NAACP National Board of Directors over the weekend.

 

The news conference will take place at 11:45 AM at the North Carolina Institute for Minority Economic Development building at 114 W. Parrish Street, Durham, NC, 4th Floor.

 

Three members of the National Board are from North Carolina: Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President of the North Carolina NAACP and chair of the Political Action Committee for the National Board; Ms. Carolyn Q. Coleman, 1st Vice President of the North Carolina NAACP and Assistant Secretary of the National Board; Mr. Lenny Springs, Assistant Treasurer of the National Board.

 

Below is the media release from the National NAACP regarding this endorsement:

 

NAACP Passes Resolution in Support of Marriage Equality

Decision Affirms Opposition to Government Efforts to Codify Discrimination

 

(Miami, Florida) The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People today released a resolution supporting marriage equality. At a meeting of the 103-year old civil rights group’s board of directors, the organization voted to support marriage equality as a continuation of its historic commitment to equal protection under the law.

"The mission of the NAACP has always been to ensure the political, social and economic equality of all people," said Roslyn M. Brock, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the NAACP. "We have and will oppose efforts to codify discrimination into law."

"Civil marriage is a civil right and a matter of civil law. The NAACP’s support for marriage equality is deeply rooted in the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and equal protection of all people." said Benjamin Todd Jealous, President and CEO of the NAACP.

The NAACP has addressed civil rights with regard to marriage since Loving v. Virginia declared anti-miscegenation laws unconstitutional in 1967. In recent years the NAACP has taken public positions against state and federal efforts to ban the rights and privileges for LGBT citizens, including strong opposition to Proposition 8 in California, the Defense of Marriage Act, and most recently, North Carolina’s Amendment 1, which changed the state constitution’s to prohibit same sex marriage.

Below is the text of the resolution passed by the NAACP board of directors:

 

The NAACP Constitution affirmatively states our objective to ensure the "political, educational, social and economic equality" of all people. Therefore, the NAACP has opposed and will continue to oppose any national, state, local policy or legislative initiative that seeks to codify discrimination or hatred into the law or to remove the Constitutional rights of LGBT citizens. We support marriage equality consistent with equal protection under the law provided under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.  Further, we strongly affirm the religious freedoms of all people as protected by the First Amendment.

 

 

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.  

 
 
 
 

 

Posted in Amendment One, Marriage Equality, NAACP National, NAACP National Board Members, NAACP NC, Same Sex Marriages | Leave a Comment »

News Alert: NC NAACP Petitions Governor to Pardon the Wilmington 10

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 19, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 17, 2012

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                              Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

DURHAM – The North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP is releasing a letter petitioning Governor Beverly Perdue to pardon the Wilmington 10.  The NC NAACP joined members of the Wilmington 10 and their attorneys for a news conference at the State Capitol on Thursday morning.

 

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Download in PDF

 

May 17, 2012

 

Hon. Beverly Eaves Perdue

Governor of North Carolina

20301 Mail Service Center

Raleigh, NC 27699-0301

 

RE:  Petition to Pardon the Wilmington Ten

 

Dear Governor Perdue:

 

In September 1972 ten young North Carolinians were tried and convicted of major felonies in New Hanover County.  After the dust settled, it turned out their main crime was trying to obey the Law, namely the requirements of the U.S. Constitution and the U.S. Supreme Court to dismantle the separate and unequal school systems of New Hanover County.  The young people were called the Wilmington Ten:  Ben Chavis, Wayne Moore, Marvin Patrick, Connie Tindall, James McKoy, Willie Vereen, Reginald Epps, Anne Shepard-Turner, William "Joe" Wright, and Jerry Jacobs.

 

In 1980, after many had served 8 years in prison, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled they had been victims of outrageous acts of prosecutorial misconduct. Chavez v. State of North Carolina, 637 F.2d 213.  In language that has become too familiar to those of us who believe in racial justice in North Carolina, the Appeals Court found: "The prosecution’s failure to produce . . . to defense counsel the ‘amended’ statement and the record of the hospitalization of the state’s key witness and the restrictions upon cross-examination of the key witness and another about favorable treatment which might have induced favorable testimony require us to overturn the convictions."

 

Such gross prosecutorial misconduct is often associated with the trials of poor minorities and civil rights activists.  Each time this linkage is validated by higher courts, it widens the breach in our human family. . . it aggravates the hurts of past indignities.  Our system does not empower our courts to repair and heal such breaches and wounds.  Our constitution, instead, places such acts of human compassion in your hands. 

 

Therefore, on behalf of the North Carolina Conference of 125 adult, college and youth NAACP Branches across the state, I ask you to pardon the Wilmington Ten.  "And you shall be called, the repairer of the breach, the restorer of paths to dwell in." Isaiah 58:12.

 

Yours in the Spirit of Truth and Justice,

Barber Signature 

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President                                                  

North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.  

 

Posted in Governor Beverly Perdue North Carolina, NAACP NC, Pardon, Wilmington 10 | Leave a Comment »

NC NAACP Open Letter to Members of the North Carolina General Assembly at the Beginning of the 2012 Short Session

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 19, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 18, 2012

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                               Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

Open Letter to Members of the North Carolina General Assembly

At the Beginning of the 2012 Short Session

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President

North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP 

 

            The NC NAACP’s members and grassroots leaders have been working diligently through our 120 adult, college and youth branches in 2012.  With our 125+ partner organizations in the Historic Thousands on Jones Street Coalition, we gathered thousands of people in Raleigh in February, to renew our commitment to a progressive 14-point agenda with one of the largest and most diverse demonstrations ever seen in North Carolina. Just this year, we’ve traveled to dozens of towns and cities, meeting with many thousands of North Carolinians on the Truth and Hope Putting a Face on Poverty in North Carolina Tour. As decisions are made on a budget that will have a direct effect on poor people, we are hopeful that any legislator with a heart for human dignity would not go unaffected by the faces and stories of inhumane poverty we encountered across North Carolina.

 

There are six things we need the General Assembly to do: 1) Don’t balance the budget on the backs of the poor, 2) Fully fund public education, 3) Focus on addressing unemployment and poverty, 4) Engage in true tax reform where the wealthy pay their fair share, 5) Defend democracy rather than pass laws that will suppress the vote, and 6) Uphold the Racial Justice Act and address racial disparities in the criminal justice system. Anything less than this violates the Constitutional principle of governing for the good of the whole.

 

As you remember, we announced a year ago that North Carolina was in a State of Emergency. The leadership held Midnight Sessions to pass a budget with the largest cuts in North Carolina’s history to public education. The leadership proved it was uninterested in upholding the NC Constitution when they passed a budget that violated the constitutional rights of poor four year-old children with their cuts to pre-K education.

 

We stood our ground and beat back efforts to pass voter suppression bills and attempts to repeal the Racial Justice Act. Despite the misleading and unsuccessful campaign by the right wing to convince people of the dangers of voter fraud, signature attestation has worked effectively all these years in maintaining the integrity of the voting process. If someone lies about who they are on a ballot, the punishment is a felony. In another victory for justice in North Carolina last month, Judge Gregory Weeks affirmed the necessity of the Racial Justice Act when he made the historic ruling in favor of death row inmate Marcus Robinson, finding that racial bias influenced jury selection and altered his sentence to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

 

            Nevertheless, a year later, as the General Assembly reconvenes for the short session, the North Carolina NAACP and the HKonJ Coalition believes that North Carolina is still in a State of Emergency. In fact, it’s only getting worse. We saw the effects of budget cuts on the faces of disabled veterans, the unemployed, children, the homeless and students during the Truth and Hope Tour. From the Foothills to the Sandhills, the oppressed and marginalized cannot take any more draconian cuts. They cannot take any more legislation that aims to disenfranchise instead of liberate their communities.

 

            Also, as you go through this session, please remember that these are too serious of times to be playing games with our democracy. North Carolina is in a State of Emergency and legislators on either side of the aisle must not leave Raleigh while in session for vacations or other reasons. The people of our State will be watching each legislator, and will know who is skipping town and skipping votes.

 

The entire HKonJ Coalition plans to be in the People’s House next week for our annual HKonJ People of Color Justice and Unity Legislative Day, where we look forward to engaging each of you in serious conversations on the issues facing our State today.

 

We still demand, as we did with a chorus of thousands of North Carolinians on February 11, "Forward Together, Not One Step Back." We will NEVER compromise when it comes to our voting rights, fought for with the lives of martyrs and the sweat and tears of our ancestors. We will NOT compromise on the Racial Justice Act. We will not compromise on justice and equality for all, and neither should you.

 

Yours in the Spirit of Truth and Justice,

Barber Signature 

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President                                                  

North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP

 

Download in PDF 

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.


NAACP Logo

Posted in NAACP NC | Leave a Comment »

The Far Right’s Trick Amendment

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 7, 2012

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NC NAACP Letterhead

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 7, 2012

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137  

                                                Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700  

 

The Far Right’s Trick Marriage-Definition Amendment

Puts Matters of Conscience in the Hands of the State

 

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II

President, North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP

Pastor, Greenleaf Christian Church, Goldsboro, NC

Member, NAACP National Board of Directors, Chair, Political Action Committee

 

                                                 Rev. Dr. Gregory Moss, Sr.       

Pastor, St. Paul Baptist Church, Charlotte, NC

 

For 103 years the NAACP has fought for equal rights for all people. We have always fought against laws that would codify discrimination, hate and division.  This is why we say Vote Against the Far Right’s Trick Amendment One on the North Carolina ballot on May 8th.   

 

The NAACP does not have a position on same sex marriage. But we have always held a strong position against laws and constitutional provisions that take away rights of minorities. This Amendment authorizes the government to take legal action in matters of personal conscience. It defines a marriage between a man and a woman as "the only domestic legal union that shall be valid or recognized in this state." By upgrading the state’s existing law against same-sex marriage to a constitutional ban, the Amendment can be used as a basis to prohibit state recognition of other unions, including civil unions and the domestic partnerships now offered to public employees in some municipalities.  

 

Constitutional amendments almost always expand the rights of people against the power of the State. This has been the noble historical trend of constitutional amendments in America. We prohibited slavery. We stopped Jim Crow. We expanded the right to vote for freed slaves, for women, for young people. This is the first such discriminatory amendment to be passed in the NC Constitution except for an amendment in 1875 that outlawed interracial marriage. But this trick Amendment reverses the noble trend of constitutional amendments. It curtails family rights. It places a matter of conscience and personal belief in the hands of the state. It sets a precedent, unheard of in North Carolina, to allow a majority to vote to curtail the rights of a minority.

 

This cynical Amendment was hatched in the backrooms of right wing extremist think tanks, organized and funded by billionaire right-wing corporations and foundations. As African Americans, Latinos and other racial minorities carefully build progressive alliances with white workers and other progressives to improve the lives of the 99%, the right-wing strategists decided to use Jesse Helms’ old "wedge" issue. One of the right-wing think-tanks, the National Organization for Marriage, said in a document recently released by the courts, the aim of the Amendment was to "drive a wedge between gays and blacks — two key Democratic constituencies."

 

The NAACP understands that issues of marriage rights for same-sex couples is a sensitive issue for many families. People of goodwill have heartfelt differences of opinion about it. We respect these differences. That is exactly why the government has no business taking away the rights of some, because others don’t like them. The forces behind this amendment want North Carolinians to vote to prohibit people, families and faith congregations from making this highly personal decision. The authors of Amendment One want to place a matter of conscience and personal belief in the hands of the state.  We believe firmly in the constitutional right of faith communities to determine whom they will and will not marry. The Government has no business in these decisions.   

 

Amendment One has implications far beyond the rights of lesbian and gay people to make a long-term legal commitment to each other. Its language is so vague it could be interpreted to snatch existing protections against domestic violence for unmarried women in North Carolina, limiting such protections to only married women. In Ohio, a similar amendment set batterers free and put unmarried domestic violence victims at risk. It could cause children of unmarried parents to lose health and prescription insurance.  It could be used to remove a child from her loving parent.  It could threaten thousands of existing custody and visitation legal agreements. Many would oppose these drastic changes if they knew about them. Amendment One slips them in nearly unseen.   

 

The real insult to African Americans and other religious people of color is that the same regressive forces behind this amendment are the same people who rushed bill after bill through the legislature, sometimes after midnight, to roll back our voting rights, our educational rights, our civil rights and our constitutional rights. Their purpose has been made abundantly clear: Undermine the constitutional role of government to operate for the good of the whole, to provide equal protection under the law, and to ensure liberty and justice for all.

 

We just returned from the Third Leg of our Truth and Hope, Putting a Face on Poverty in the Foothills and Mountains of NC. We heard story after story, saw scenes of deep despair and hopelessness in every part of our state. The issues of joblessness,  homelessness, hunger, sickness and despair have multiplied in the past six years, since Wall Street’s bundles collapsed. Did the far right join with the growing new progressive coalition to address these basic human needs of our people? No. They placed on the ballot a Trick Amendment to distract all of us from dealing with the problems of poverty, and to force progressives to fight off another effort to take away family rights. 

 

The NAACP’s historical mission, and our analysis of this cynical, poorly drafted Amendment leave us no choice: Vote against Amendment One on Tuesday, May 8th.  

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.  

 

 

 
 
 
 

See related:

NAACP NC

Amendment One

 

Posted in NAACP NC, Trick Amendment | Leave a Comment »

2012 PRIMARIES VOTING PROBLEM REPORT

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 7, 2012

 

NC NAACP Letterhead

 

Dear NC NAACP/HKonJ Network,

 

With Election Day upon us tomorrow we ask that you make sure to report any problems voters face at the polls tomorrow. This is the first election to occur under the new redistricting maps that NC General Assembly adopted in 2011. Prior to going to the polls, registered voters can look up their voter information on the NC State Board of Elections website at www.ncsbe.gov. Under "My Election Information" voters can review a copy of their sample ballot prior to arriving at the polls.

 

If a voter reports any problems on Election Day, a Voter Problem Reporting Form is attached that should be completed immediately by the individual experiencing the difficulty. Completed forms should be returned immediately to the State NAACP Office via email or fax. Click here to download the form. 

 

Please feel free to share the Voter Problem Reporting Form in your community and with other individuals and groups monitoring the polls. If an individual is not able to complete the form, they may also call the toll-free hotline, 866-OUR-VOTE (866-687-8683), that is operated by a public service program at the UNC School of Law in Chapel Hill, the voting-rights group Democracy North Carolina and the national Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, headquartered in Washington, DC. The Spanish language hotline is 888-VE-Y-VOTA (888-839-8682).

 

Also, if a problem is experienced, it should be reported to the local county and State Board of Elections as well.

 

We appreciate any help in distributing this form and documenting issues faced during primary voting. Please contact the State Office if you have any questions.

 

Sincerely,

 

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II
President, NC NAACP

Mrs. Amina J. Turner,
Executive Director, NC NAACP

Ms. Erin Dale Byrd,
Chair, NC NAACP Political Action Committee

Atty. Jennifer Marsh
Legal Redress Coordinator/Public Policy Analyst, NC NAACP

See related:

NAACP NC

Posted in Elections 2012, NAACP NC, Primary Election May 8, 2012, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NC NAACP/National Executive Board Member | Leave a Comment »

NC NAACP Women of Excellence Conference Commemorates 57th Annual Mother of the Year Coronation – Saturday, May 5, 2012

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 3, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead
Click Here to Download News Release

CORRECTED

IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 2, 2102

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                                Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

North Carolina Women Raise Resources for the NAACP’s Fight for

Economic Justice and Racial Equality for All:

57th Annual Mother of the Year Coronation

DURHAM – The North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP announces today they will hold their Women of Excellence Conference in Raleigh, North Carolina this year. The Women of Excellence Conference commemorating the 57th Annual Mother of the Year Program is a public event that is held annually to honor women from across the state for their service to the NAACP, and for their contributions within their respective communities.

 

The Coronation will take place at First Cosmopolitan Baptist Church, 1515 Cross Link Road, Raleigh, NC beginning at 1:00 PM. The theme for this year is:

  

We Will and We Must Fight Back to Secure America’s Promise:

It’s Time to Act: Critical Issues Facing Women and Children

 

The North Carolina NAACP is proud to announce this year’s speaker: Gwendolyn Keyes Fleming, Director of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Southeast Region, serving Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and six Tribes.

 

Ms. Fleming will be the keynote speaker at North Carolina NAACP’s 57th Annual Mother of the Year Coronation on Saturday, May 5 at First Cosmopolitan Baptist Church beginning at 1:00pm. This event is free and open to the public. For more information, call the NC NAACP State Office at 919-682-4700.

 

            President Barack Obama appointed Ms. Fleming as the Region 4 Regional Administrator in September 2010. She is the first African American to hold this position in Region 4; however, this is not the first time she has made history.

 

Gwen Keyes Fleming took office as the DeKalb County District Attorney in January 2005 making her the first African-American and first woman ever to serve in this post.

 

            There will also be a Brunch Symposium at 10 AM. The speakers are Erin Dale Byrd, Civic Engagement Coordinator for Blueprint NC and Angella Dunston, Director of Citizen and Faith Outreach for the State of North Carolina. Cost of tickets are $20 for adults and $5 for children 17 and under.

 

"In these times of economic strife, we must come together—blacks, whites, Latinos and others to stand in solidarity to ensure that budgets are not balanced on the backs of the poor. Draconian budget cuts to health care and education, and efforts to dismantle workers’ rights directly affect working families, particularly women and children. The stakes are too high to not empower women with knowledge about the political climate that we all find ourselves in today," stated State NAACP President, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II. "Monies raised support NAACP’s fight for civil rights for all people and our state office."

 

Mrs. O’Linda Gillis, State Chair of the Women in NAACP (WIN) and Mother of the Year Committee added, "The State’s NAACP Mother of the Year is celebrating its 57th Anniversary in North Carolina. In addition to the Brunch Symposium, which is always informative, and the Mother of the Year Coronation, where the women wear ballroom gowns and tiaras, the state also recognizes a deserving woman as the Lorie L. Graham Award winner. This winner has exhibited unselfish qualities and contributed to both her NAACP branch as well as to her community in extraordinary ways. We are excited about coming to Raleigh, and look forward to seeing who this year’s big winners will be."

 

"Women have been at the center of the work of the NAACP since its inception 103 years ago," said Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director of the NC NAACP. "Our principal objectives have remained constant: ‘to ensure the political, educational, social and economic equality of all citizens.’  And it is this charge that has enabled us all to witness the noble victories of the 20th century that we take for granted and must continue to sustain in the New Millennium, especially today. Thus, we can not thank the women and their branches enough for raising money to support the NAACP."

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. 

Posted in Mother of the Year NAACP NC, NAACP NC, NC NAACP Women of Excellence Conference | Leave a Comment »

On the Occasion of the Passing of Dr. Leroy T. Walker

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on May 2, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

May 1, 2012

 

For More Information:          Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

Mrs. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

On the Occasion of the passing of Dr. Leroy T. Walker 

 

As I travel today on the Truth & Hope Putting a Face on Poverty Tour in Western North Carolina that seeks to help NC and its citizens overcome and clear the hurdles of poverty and joblessness, my thoughts and the thoughts of the NAACP are with Dr. Leroy Walker and his family. We remember his legacy with the greatest esteem.

 

Dr. Walker taught us how to clear hurdles.  He taught young black athletes how to succeed and be victorious despite the hurdles of race and the hurdles of opportunity.  Coach Walker taught them how to overcome whatever challenges were in their way to become Olympic champions with skill and wisdom and tenacity.  He placed small historically black college athletic programs onto the world stage.  He participated in the transformation of diversity in leadership in our state, in our nation and in our world. 

 

Dr. Walker was not merely a coach on the track field, he was a life coach.  As my chancellor, he inspired us as young student leaders to always be courageous, strong and thoughtful.  When it came to the issues of truth and service and how we would live our lives, he taught us to make contributions toward the greater good and the uplift of humanity.  Dr. Walker challenged us and coached us to always pursue excellence without excuse.  On a personal note, Dr. Walker helped to open the doors when I was a young student and student body president with limited resources.  He used his vast connections to help me to be able to obtain an education in theology from Duke University. 

 

Dr. Walker was clear that if we can start from the same starting block, the rules are fair, and we are allowed to participate in the race, then victory is only a matter of discipline, persistence and intestinal fortitude. And so on this day, when his body is laid to rest, and he has completed the final lap of the race assigned to him, by the Eternal God, let us reach back and grab the baton of his legacy and run on until we see what the end shall be.

 

Thank you Dr. Walker for inspiring us, challenging us, and pushing us to give our best and to make life better for others.

 

Yours in the Spirit of Truth and Justice,

 

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President

North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP and

Member, National NAACP Board of Directors

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. 

 
 
 
 
 

See related:

NAACP NC

Posted in Dr. LeRoy T. Walker North Carolina Central University, NAACP NC | Leave a Comment »

Rev. William Barber Speaks Out Against Amendment One

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 28, 2012

Response: It is a shame how they have worded this Amendment on the ballot to trick folks into voting for it. Listen to Rev. William Barber II tell you why you should vote against it.

Damn didn’t they say that our President didn’t respect the Constitution (lies) but now they want to amend the Constitution (truth).

Click on picture to watch video. Source: ProtectNCFamilies

image

See related:

Amendment One

Posted in Amendment One, Constitution, Elections 2012, NAACP NC, President Barack Obama, Primary Election May 8, 2012, ProtectNCFamilies, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NC NAACP/National Executive Board Member | Leave a Comment »

Media Advisory: NC NAACP Rolls Out Statewide Media Campaign to Expose the Truth About the Discriminatory Amendment One

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 26, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 26, 2012

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                                Ms. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

NC NAACP Rolls Out Statewide Media Campaign to Expose the Truth About the Discriminatory Amendment One

 

This week, in the face of an extreme rightwing attack on minorities and the poor, the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP is rolling out a major media campaign to make clear the facts and constitutional dangers facing all North Carolinians through the discriminatory Amendment One.

 

            Through ads in African-American newspapers, radio spots across the state, mailers, and robocalls to tens of thousands North Carolina voters, and brochures distributed to over fifty counties through grassroots NAACP branch leadership, the public education campaign is already resonating with everyday North Carolinians.

           

"The polls and the politicians are asking the wrong questions on this discriminatory amendment, hatched in the backrooms of the extremist, rightwing think-tanks," said Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President of the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP. "Our message is consistent: A vote on the same sex marriage amendment has nothing to do with your personal and religious opinion on same sex marriage but everything to do with whether or not you believe discrimination should be codified and legalized constitutionally. We should never seek to codify and vote discrimination, hate and division into the very heart and framework of our Constitution."

 

Dr. Barber continued, "The real insult to the Civil Rights Movement is that the same regressive, ultra-conservative Tea Party type folks suing to overturn the 1965 Voting Rights Act, re-segregating and robbing our public schools of valuable resources, blocking workers’ rights to organize, trying to force us all to get photo ID’s to exercise our right to vote and cut back on the time and opportunities to vote, and attempting to repeal the Racial Justice Act, now somehow think the sons and daughters of the Civil Rights Movement cannot see through their Trojan Horse trick."

 

Secret documents from the National Organization for Marriage (NOM), recently unsealed by the courts, revealed the real strategy behind this amendment. Their 2009 report reads:

The strategic goal of this project is to drive a wedge between gays and blacks – two key Democratic constituencies. Find, equip, energize and connect African American spokespeople for marriage; develop a media campaign around their objections to gay marriage as a civil right; provoke the gay marriage base into responding by denouncing these spokesmen and women as bigots. No politician wants to take up and push an issue that splits the base of his party. Fanning the hostility raised in the wake of Prop 8 is key to raising the costs of pushing gay marriage to its advocates … find attractive young black Democrats to challenge white gay marriage advocates electorally.’"[1] 

 

            Dr. Barber said, "On the grassroots level we get a very different response when we cut through the Trojan Horse trick of the Tea Party backed forces and ask ‘Do you think we should tamper with the protections of the 14th Amendment and the Equal Protection Under the Law clause, or Section One of the North Carolina Constitution?’ When we ask ‘Do you believe, especially in the South, we should create a precedent whereby the majority votes on the rights of a minority?’ the sinister divide and conquer rhetoric is torn asunder. When people find out that groups leading the pro-Amendment efforts, like the Family Research Council and the American Family Association, are affiliated with national organizations identified as hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center, they are horrified by the deceitful Amendment One. When people find out that the amendment could also negatively impact heterosexual couples, take away domestic violence protections for women, strip legal recognition and protection from unmarried couples and leave families and children with no basic access to healthcare and prescription drug coverage, people overwhelmingly see through the distractions and tricks and say, ‘We won’t be fooled. Not on our watch!’"[2] 

 

            The NAACP’s position on any constitutional amendment that limits rights has been consistent for over 20 years, when other campaigns of this kind were proposed. For 103 years the NAACP’s mission has always been to "ensure the political, educational, social, and economic equality of rights of all persons."  The NC NAACP has always opposed any custom, tradition, practice, law or constitutional amendment that denies any rights, privileges, or opportunities to any person which can legally be extended to others.

 

The radio spots are available at www.naacpnc.org.

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. 

 

 



[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-becker/nom-documents-race-baiting_b_1382267.html, "Secret NOM Documents Reveal Race-Baiting Strategy," March 27, 2012

[2] Maxine Eichner,et al., "Potential Legal Impact of the Proposed Domestic Legal Union Amendment to the North Carolina Constitution," 1, (2011)

 


NC NAACP Newspaper Ad

 

 

See related:

NAACP NC

Posted in Discriminatory Amendment One, NAACP NC, NC General Assembly, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NC NAACP/National Executive Board Member | Leave a Comment »

Statement Reflecting on First Racial Justice Act Decision Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NAACP NC

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 22, 2012

 

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 20, 2012

 

For More Information:           Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                                Ms. Amina J. Turner, Executive Director, 919-682-4700

          Atty. Jennifer Marsh, Legal Redress Coordinator,

      919-682-4700

 

(DURHAM) Below is an official statement of the NC NAACP reflecting on today’s ruling by Judge Gregory Weeks in the first Racial Justice Act decision. The NC NAACP will hold a media briefing on Monday with a full examination of today’s ruling.

 

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Statement Reflecting on First Racial Justice Act Decision

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President 

North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP

 

First, allow me, on behalf of the National, State, and Local units of the NAACP to express our deepest sympathy to the family of Eric Tornbloom. Many NAACP members, their families, and friends, have been victims of similar violence.   I know how deep his loss is felt, and I ask that we take a moment to pray for him and his family.

 

It is fitting that, on Sunday, April 22nd, we mark the 25th anniversary of the Supreme Court decision in McCleskey v. Kemp. That decision ruled a defendant cannot rely upon statistical evidence of systemic racial bias to prove his death sentence was unconstitutional, no matter how strong that evidence may be.   Those of us who have tried to breathe life into the words "Equal Protection Under the Law" have marked April 22nd as one of the lowest points in our long quest for equality and justice. But today, almost 25 years later, because of the persistent, diligent, grass-roots struggle of literally hundreds of thousands of people of good will in North Carolina who fought for, passed, and then worked to implement North Carolina’s historic Racial Justice Act, we now have the first finding of racial discrimination in the prosecution of a defendant on Death Row. This decision will automatically change Mr. Marcus Robinson’s sentence to life without parole. . According to the law, and verified by an analysis made by the Institute of Government in Chapel Hill, this is a final judgment

 

            We take this moment to remind prosecutors and their staffs that the Racial Justice Act mentions the idea of training program, to help weed out racial bias as they exercise their broad discretion in capital cases. We encourage the Association of District Attorneys to take advantage of such training to drain some of the unconscious and conscious racial bias out of our courthouses.

 

            This major decision in the long struggle against racism in southern courthouses prompts me to comment on the connections between the McClesky decision a quarter century ago and this first decision under our historic Racial Justice Act. When justice appears to value some victims less than others, it does not deserve the name ‘justice.’ Those of us who have been paying attention know this problem did not begin with the admitted denial by the McClesky v. Kemp decision 25 years ago. Over a century ago, the NAACP was founded to bring to the nation’s attention the use of vigilante lynchings of Black men who were rumored to have committed crimes against whites. As the NAACP began to win the struggle for national public opinion against lynching, southern states quickly moved the lynching tree inside their all-white courthouses, and changed the name to capital punishment. Official lynchings became the norm in southern courthouses against any Black man accused of raping a White woman, although it was practically unheard of to bring a capital case against a White man accused of raping a Black woman.

 

History books and professors, the media, and the New South apologists kept this well-known fact under the sheets until after World War II. To Kill a Mockingbird, the book and the movie, helped to challenge this denial in the early 1960′s. The obscene racial disparities that were accepted across the South in the application of the death penalty became a major embarrassment during the cold war, as case after case of unofficial capital punishment, such as Emmitt Till in 1955, and official capital punishment was brought to light by the NAACP and other civil rights groups. In 1972 the Supreme Court effectively stopped the death penalty for all crimes, but only a few years later, what became known as the Nixon court, reinstated the costly and race-based practice in 1976.

 

            In 1987, Jack Boger, now the Dean of the UNC School of Law, brought the case of Warren McClesky to the Supreme Court, arguing that racial considerations played a part in his client’s receiving the death penalty. The Court wrote that such considerations were so embedded in our courthouses they were an "inevitable part" of our system of justice, and therefore statistical evidence of systemic racial bias could not be used to overturn a death sentence. Who cares, the Court told Mr. McClesky and his young advocate, Jack Boger, whether defendants convicted of murdering White victims were over four times more likely to be sentenced to death than defendants who were charged with murdering a Black person? Who cares if study after study showed the best predictor of who lives and who dies in southern courts has nothing to do with the content or context of the crime, but everything to do with the color of the victim’s skin.

           

            Obviously, the answer to this riddle is not to execute more defendants who have been convicted of killing Black people. The answer is to focus on the cowardly fallacy that underlay the McCleskey decision — that there is nothing we can do about the endemic racism in the southern criminal justice system because it is an "inevitable part" of it. We believe that racism need not be inevitable, and that truth will win out. Today, almost 25 years after the Supreme Court implied racial considerations were an inevitable part of Southern Justice, another Court, following carefully the guidelines set for us by the Racial Justice Act, said No. It is not an inevitable part. We will face the racial considerations in our system, and we can face the truth in the South. This decision reveals the lie of the inevitability premise. 

 

            In the past few years at least five Black men were released or barely missed death row because brave media reporters; hard-working, underpaid lawyers; and the NAACP have proven that N.C. prosecutors had tried or convicted the wrong man! Today another Black man has successfully presented evidence that showed his sentence was polluted by racial considerations. Each of these revelations strike the public consciousness like the hammer of justice. Each revelation helps more of us face the hard truth about our criminal justice system.

 

            Each of these revelations lead to a broader, deeper commitment to the truth that the simplest way, the surest way, the safest way, to be sure the ‘inevitable" racial considerations the Supreme Court mentioned 25 years ago play no part in the decision of who lives and who dies, is to repeal capital punishment.   The NAACP has studied this question for 103 years. The question helped start our organization. It is a question we have never wavered about. It is part of our 14 Point People’s Agenda. Repeal the Death Penalty. Save money. Save our souls. Save and reform our criminal justice system.   Repeal the Death Penalty.

 

 

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 

Posted in NAACP NC, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NC NAACP/National Executive Board Member | Leave a Comment »

Zimmerman is Arrested today, but the work to Arrest racial profiling and racial injustice in the legal system continues tomorrow – NAACP NC

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 12, 2012

NC NAACP Letterhead

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 11, 2012

 

For More Information:     Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, President, 919-394-8137

                                         Mrs. Amina J. Turner,  Executive Director, 919-682-4700

 

Zimmerman is Arrested today, but the work to Arrest racial profiling and racial injustice in the legal system continues tomorrow  

  

Tonight was an important beginning with the arrest and second degree murder charge against George Zimmerman for the death of Trayvon Martin. It begins what we have wanted in the Civil Rights Community: an arrest and a fair and open trial based on the facts. It begins the process of restoring some faith and hope that justice will be blind and our legal system will be impartial. 

 

But while it is a beginning, it is not an end. It should not be an end to our prayers for Trayvon’s family. It should not be an end to us remembering that an innocent teenager was racially profiled for wearing a hoodie and "carrying skittles while black" with deadly consequences. Trayvon, who could have been any of our sons, is dead. It should not be an end to our following or monitoring this case. While Zimmerman has been arrested, it certainly doesn’t put an end to the racial profiling and racial application of arrests, prosecutions and imprisonment in our communities. Rather, now more than ever, racial profiling must be challenged by an ongoing Movement that demands respect, raises a moral outcry and registers our position politically through the electoral process in ways that continue to challenge systemic injustice.

 

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.    

 

 

 

See related:

NAACP NC 

Trayvon Martin

Posted in George Zimmerman admits to shooting teen, NAACP NC, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NC NAACP/National Executive Board Member, Trayvon Martin Florida Youth Killed | Leave a Comment »

Video/Pictures: Memorial Service For Trayvon Benjamin Martin Rocky Mount NC Sponsored By Hubert D. Pope Funeral Home Inc. Invited Speaker Was Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NAACP NC State Conference of Branches/National Board Member/Pastor Greenleaf Baptist Church Goldsboro NC

Posted by Curmilus Dancy II (Butch) on April 11, 2012

imageClick on picture to view video 1 hr. 48 mins. total.

Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II was invited to Rocky Mount. You have to see what took place at this memorial.

See related:

Locally, a Memorial Service for Trayvon will be held at 7:00 p.m., on Tuesday, April 10, 2012, at Morning Star Church of Christ, 225 S. Glendale Avenue in Rocky Mount, NC NAACP President, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II will be the Guest Speaker 

Local memorial held for slain Florida teen – Rocky Mount Telegram 

Trayvon Martin 

H.D. Pope – Rocky Mount NC 

Click on picture to view 248 total.

image

Posted in H.D. Pope Funeral Home, Memorial Service, NAACP NC, NAACP Rocky Mount Branch, Rev. Andre Knight Rocky Mount NC Councilman/President NAACP, Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II President NC NAACP/National Executive Board Member, Rocky Mount NC, Trayvon Martin Florida Youth Killed | Leave a Comment »

 
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